Word Of The Day

  • Vacuous
    • Today's Word

    Vacuous

    Vacuous


    VAK-yoo-us

    Definition

    (adjective) Devoid of intelligence, substance, or meaningful content; empty in a way that is made worse by the appearance of fullness.

    Example

    The panel discussion was so vacuous — four articulate people saying nothing of substance for ninety minutes — that the audience left feeling vaguely cheated by their own attention.

    Word Origin

    Vacuous derives from the Latin vacuus, meaning “empty” or “void,” rooted in vacare — “to be empty” or “to be free.” The same root gives us vacuum, vacant, vacation — all words built around the idea of emptiness or absence. It entered English in the 17th century, initially used in scientific contexts to describe a literal vacuum before acquiring its cutting figurative sense of a mind or expression that contains nothing worth engaging with.

    Fun Fact

    The philosophical concept of horror vacui — Latin for “fear of the void” — held that nature itself abhors emptiness and will always rush to fill it. Aristotle argued that a true vacuum was physically impossible, a position that dominated scientific thinking for nearly two thousand years until Evangelista Torricelli demonstrated the existence of a vacuum in 1643 using a mercury barometer. The irony is that horror vacui turned out to describe human psychology far more accurately than it described physics — people genuinely do rush to fill empty space, empty silence, and empty conversation with whatever is available, which is precisely how vacuous content comes to occupy so much of the world.

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